A rationale for procedure selection to repair female urethral stricture associated with urethrovaginal fistulas - Abstract

PURPOSE: We investigated a rationale for procedure selection to repair female urethral stricture associated with urethrovaginal fistula.

We compared the outcomes of the 5 techniques used.

MATERIALS AND METHODS: Between January 1999 and October 2011, 44 female patients with urethral stricture associated with urethrovaginal fistula were treated using a total of 5 techniques. The surgical techniques were labial pedicle flap urethroplasty in 24 patients, vulvar flap urethroplasty in 3, anterior vaginal flap urethroplasty in 11, end-to-end anastomosis in 4 and bladder flap urethroplasty in 2. Supplementary procedures were performed in some patients during urethroplasty, including bladder neck reshaping for incontinence in 5, intestinal-vaginal fistula repair in 3, colpoplasty for island vulvar skin flaps in 3, middle vaginal stricture vaginoplasty in 2 and enlargement of the vaginal introitus in 1.

RESULTS: Average postoperative followup was 42.3 months (range 6 to 140). Urethrovaginal fistula recurred in 2 patients because of infection, urethral stricture developed in 1 and stress incontinence appeared in 1. The other patients voided normally with an average maximum urine flow greater than 15 ml per second (range 16.7 to 46). The overall anatomical success rate was 93.18% (41 of 44 cases) and the functional success rate was 90.91% (40 of 44).

CONCLUSIONS: Surgical procedures for treating female urethral strictures with urethrovaginal fistulas should be based on fistula location, stricture length and vaginal anatomy. A transvaginal approach might be optimal if the vagina is wide and easily dilated. Pedicle labial flap urethroplasty was a reliable technique for complex strictures.

Written by:
Xu YM, Sa YL, Fu Q, Zhang J, Xie H, Feng C.   Are you the author?
Department of Urology, Affiliated Sixth People's Hospital, Shanghai Jiaotong University and Shanghai Eastern Institute for Urologic Repair and Reconstruction, Shanghai, People's Republic of China.

Reference: J Urol. 2013 Jan;189(1):176-81.
doi: 10.1016/j.juro.2012.09.005


PubMed Abstract
PMID: 23174242

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